Showing posts with label tibet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tibet. Show all posts

Monday, May 23, 2022

Quick notes: Tibet policy | Battle tank...

  • India's Tibet policy: It is not that India did not have excellent strategic thinkers at the time, but Nehru decided not to use their competence. Tibet would never be discussed as a result. Today, one priority for Delhi is to have an in-depth discussion with Dharamsala as soon as possible.


  • Russian weaponry: This war has revealed a major design flaw, for instance, in the T-72 main battle tank -- the wrong placement of the ammo storage compartment under the crew cupola, which tends to blow up with the first guided anti-tank munition hit midship.

    It is a matter of grave concern to the Indian armoured forces featuring the T-72. Maybe, this will finally convince the army headquarters to take ownership of the indigenous Arjun MBT (which handily beat the Russian T-90 and T-72 tanks in test trials). If the Ukraine crisis proves anything it is for the Indian military to 'Buy Indian'.


  • Farm machinery exacting heavy toll on soil: In soil that has been squashed by heavy weight of farm machinery, air is forced out and the soil becomes compacted, leading to flooding and poor harvests. "Compaction can happen within a few seconds when we drive on the soil, but it can take decades for that soil to recover".


  • Machine learning for farming applications: John Deere's autonomous tractor will usher in a new era of farming. Farmers are losing control of their machines and accuse John Deere of creating a monopoly in farm equipment manufacturing.


  • Netflix losing its grip: Cancellations rise among long-standing subscribers


  • Raag Jhinjhoti: Shashwati Mandal



  • When Shiva appears, Chandala disappears: The disappearance of the Chandala therefore marks the disappearance of the whole ideas he represented. The ‘meaningful nonsense’ of the Chandala of the local myth is thus changed — while the former questions the caste system, the changed version makes such an illusion, but behind it, it in fact seeks to revitalise and legitimise caste.


  • Recipe for disaster: English-medium in rural primary = recipe for complete destruction of Indian talent.


  • Cities markedly warmer than the countryside: "Heat islands" in and near Delhi, with nighttime temps up to 102° (40°F hotter than nearby fields).
  • Image


  • But wait, there's a solution: Shade from street trees reduced surface temperatures by an average of 12°C. Concrete surfaces shaded permanently by a bank of trees were cooled by up to 20°C in the summer.


Thursday, December 24, 2020

Quick notes: Export zones | Neo-pagans...

  • A case for e-commerce export zones: Making Indian products available to the international customer at the click of a button would be an effective push to ‘Make in India’ as ECEZs become the gateway to ‘Make for the World’.


  • Modern-Day Pagans Celebrate Ancient Gods: Many are reacting to a childhood religion they found inadequate or oppressive.. They avoid “churchy” language as much as possible because it “can be a very big turnoff for people who were angry at their past religious affiliation... “As the Millennial generation enters adulthood, its members display much lower levels of religious affiliation, including less connection with Christian churches, than older generations.”


  • Islam cannot bind: Millions of Muslim migrants in Pakistan hope for path to citizenship


  • Karima Mehrab Baloch: Missing human rights activist who had fled Pakistan found dead in Toronto. She was a vocal critic of human rights abuses in Pakistan and a supporter of autonomy for Balochistan. Earlier this year, Sajid Hussain, founder and chief editor of The Balochistan Post, was found dead in the Fyris River near Uppsala, Sweden.


  • US Congress passes landmark bill in support of Tibet: It will pave the way for the U.S. to issue economic and visa sanctions against any Chinese officials who interfere with the succession of the Dalai Lama, and will require China to allow Washington to establish a consulate in Lhasa — the capital of the Tibet Autonomous Region – before Beijing can open any more consulates in the U.S.


  • VerSe: Indian TikTok copycat gets Google, Microsoft backing in $100 million fund raise. VerSe also owns news and content platform Dailyhunt, which offers content in multiple Indian languages.


  • Castor Oil Benefits, Side Effects, Dose: It acts as tonic, laxative and helps in rejuvenation. It is also useful in relieving worm infestation, Abdominal colic, intermittent fever, skin diseases, Rheumatoid arthritis, hemorrhoids with hard stool problem and constipation.


Thursday, September 24, 2020

Quick notes: Gulags in Tibet | Chinese tech...

  • Gulags are thriving: China is pushing Tibetans off their lands and turning them into factory workers . 500K Tibetans were forced into labor camps this year and quotas were set for transfers outside the region.
    :: China's new plan to tame Tibet.

    Himalayan villagers support Indian troops: “We want to help the Indian army to secure their positions immediately. We are carrying supplies to them, doing multiple rounds in a day, to ensure that the army doesn’t face too many problems.”. . . The Tibet factor.


  • China's tech prowess: Increasingly, China is supplying the kind of sophisticated machinery that German manufacturers once dominated, like high-end tunnel borers and hydraulic valves and pumps used in wind turbines. “It’s only a matter of time until Chinese firms are No. 1,” says Ulrich Ackermann of German Engineering Association. 


  • State Media: Chinese tech companies going abroad are ‘spreading China’s influence’


  • Good riddance: Facebook may leave Europe if Ireland enforces ban on data sharing with US


  • Microgreens: Hydroponic Farm Ventures Take Root in Indian Cities


  • China’s 40-Year, Billion-Tree Project: Launched in 1978 to protect the north, northwest, and northeast, three regions affected by sandstorms sweeping out of the Gobi Desert, the so-called Three-North Shelter Forest Program aimed to grow 87 million acres of new trees—a forest the size of Germany—across the country’s north by 2050.


  • Turning Gray into Green: Meishe River Greenway and Fengxiang Park, Haikou, China
  • Image


  • Pakistan begins phase-3 trial of Chinese vaccine: It was an “honor” for Pakistan to be among the few countries participating in “the biggest and relatively difficult” phase-3 study of a vaccine.

    Irony: China struggling to convince citizens to take Chinese-made flu shots


Sunday, September 13, 2020

Quick notes: Tech exports | Bird menace...

  • Forget China, can India match Vietnam in exports?  Vietnam has been quick to realize the importance of hi-tech exports amounting to 40%, whereas India’s share stands at 9%. In comparison to Vietnam's technology-oriented exports, our exports comprised largely low-tech manufacturing products like mineral fuels, pearls and organic chemicals


  • How Communist China weaponized the waters of Asia: Nine great rivers of Asia descend from the Tibetan plateau. After the Chinese Communist Party occupied Tibet, it has essentially monopolized these waters  



  • Threat to Rafale: Bird menace due to garbage dump danger to Rafale. IAF has sought immediate implementation of Solid Waste Management scheme to reduce the activity of large birds like black kites in the aerodrome zone of 10 km around Ambala airfield. “This would involve instituting of littering penalty, improvement in garbage collection and setting up of a suitable SWM plant at a suitable distance from the airfield”. 


  • Rahul Baba's failed attempt to create rift in Army ranks: The defence ministry officials clarified that there is no difference in the quality and quantity of the items served, except that the officers are served different items than those served to the jawans.


  • The enemy within: How Indo-China border dispute once split the Communist Party of India.. “A Communist Party statement praised the Chinese for leading the Tibetans from ‘medieval darkness’ and blamed the rebellion on Tibetan ‘serf owners’ backed by Indian reactionaries and Western imperialists”.


  • Guru Brahma Guru Vishnu:


  • Huawei's Android OS rival: Huawei to shift phones to its own Harmony operating system from 2021


  • Sexualization of girls: #CancelNetflix trends on social media after preteen twerking film ‘Cuties’ debuts


Sunday, September 06, 2020

Quick notes: Tibet advantage | Urban farming...

  • Claude Arpi: Is the ‘Tibet card’ in play? A dramatic Indian Army operation last week has given India tactical advantage in the 4-month-long confrontation with China. It was the first time in those four months that the Indian Army could ‘pre-empt’ the Chinese grabbing more Indian territory.. The best bet for India and the exiled Tibetans is to work closely together; it could pay rich dividends.


  • PLA failures: Xi Jinping plans to purge Chinese military after failures on Indian border.. Xi is pushing China to the brink of military confrontations in several theaters by personally taking a hand in provocative actions like the August 26 launch of “aircraft carrier killer” ballistic missiles into the South China Sea. 


  • Peaceful fall: Decoupling with U.S. would cut China’s growth to 3.5%. China would face even more disastrous consequences if the U.S. can coordinate its key allies, such as Japan, South Korea, Germany and France, to also decouple. In that case, China’s growth potential could fall to 1.6% in 2030.


  • Dr D Nageshwar Reddy: Initially, people were talking about the importance of handwashing but now we know they are less important than wearing masks. One study has said that if masks are put on properly and if physical distancing is followed, it is equivalent to 90% effect of lockdown. Instead of lockdown, the same effect can be achieved by people wearing masks and maintaining distance.


  • Urban farming is catching on: It can make us healthier and more resilient: Getting out into nature and gardening can improve your mental health and physical fitness.

Monday, August 24, 2020

Quick notes: Desi apps | Hindi imposition...

  • Indian TikTok copycats no match to the real deal: Indian rip-offs of TikTok still have to get the basics right —a tough feat considering the lack of expertise in short-video in the country... The interface and functionality of most of these apps were so similar to TikTok that it was clear that none of them had a truly distinct vision that would offer users something new and keep them loyal in the long-run.


  • Devouring Nepal? China occupying land in 7 border districts, says Nepal Survey Department


  • 1962 redux? Modi-Doval vying for Jawaharlal Nehru-award for Tibet strategy... "India is capable of giving a befitting response to Chinese aggression". That's about it.


  • Flying Gripen, Thailand Beat Down China's Air Force: Over the final three days of the war game, the Thais killed 22 Chinese jets and lost three of their own. The final tally for the exercise favored the Thai air force. The Gripens shot down 42 J-11s while the J-11s shot down just 34 Gripens. 


  • Impose local language on migrants: Hindi migrants to non-Hindi states should learn local language, not the other way round. Regional language should have primacy.



  • Cost of Bengaluru's traffic jams has a number: Bengaluru's notorious traffic congestion is taking a toll on health and productivity, with each of its residents losing an average Rs 52,264 per year on medication and for measures taken to avoid the congestion.


  • Karnataka mathematics teacher wins national award: Yakub made a whopping 300 videos on teaching maths in a simple way by demystifying its complex concepts and uploaded them on YouTube to make them accessible to the students.. . . Basavaraj Sungari: Karnataka teacher uses augmented reality tools to make online science lessons interactive


Friday, July 24, 2020

Quick notes: Tourism bungle | Missing VCs...

  • India shot itself in the foot: Indian authorities demolished commercial tourist structures along the banks of Pangong Lake, citing violation of Wildlife Act. "Had these commercial set ups not been demolished, we could have easily detected Chinese intrusion into Pangong Tso area. Taking advantage of darkness, Chinese troops managed to enter eight kilometers inside Indian territory"..... "The govt decision to demolish the tourist structures had left more than 500 people jobless. Besides, tourism activities by these temporary tents were preventing the Chinese from staking claim on territory".


  • Bharat: DRDO drone likely to be deployed in Ladakh. The drone can provide real-time video transmission and has advanced night vision capabilities.


  • Indian VCs are missing: "Good start-ups are getting sold to foreign firms, Indian investors need to play greater role"


  • App craze: TikTok may be gone but another ByteDance app is thriving in India. About 74% of those who downloaded the Resso app are from India.


  • Who is a Brahmin?
  • - - - - -


  • Feminists want patriarchy of Islamists: "Swedish feminists have destroyed the patriarchy and with it the male dominance hierarchy. In doing this these same feminists forgot that most women's instinct is to mate up and across that hierarchy. So what happens when the dominance is gone? Women withdraw from men, marriage, and childbirth.

    But the feminists actually run Sweden now, and the instinctive need for the male dominance hierarchy hasn't gone away. So the feminists import hundred of thousands of (Muslim) men who regard feminism as dangerous nonsense, and who will restore the male dominance hierarchy the only way that it can be restored: by restoring the patriarchy. This will solve the women's deep-level problem, because instinct trumps ideology every time".


  • Setback for indigenous alternatives: The planned import of several categories of weapons -- specifically light tanks, Israeli Spike LR anti-tank guided missiles (ATGMs), Israeli Heron unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), US-made SIG Sauer assault rifles and MiG-29 fighter aircraft -- will undercut Indian programmes to develop indigenous alternatives.


  • China may buy Russia's Su-57: Unlike China, India does not have a fifth-generation fighter, so the Su-57 is an attractive warplane to India.


  • Floods force China to blow up dam: China blasted holes in the Chuhe River dam in order to “alleviate the pressure of flood control” at the massive Three Gorges Dam.



Monday, July 20, 2020

Quick notes: Visa Gods | Indian inaction...

  • Visa Gods and Brain Drain: Why the Indian govt and media get all worked up about declining opportunities for Indian out-migration has never made sense.

    In the early 2000s, when India’s rise was viewed in a positive light, many had hoped that like the East Asian communities in the US — Japanese, Koreans and Chinese — Indians in the US would also return home, invest in India and contribute to the home country’s development. However, for a variety of reasons, this expectation is yet to be realised.

    It would be interesting to see how many of those who attended Modi’s rallies abroad have decided to return home to contribute to India’s “atmanirbharata”. . . . Taxing the Brain Drain.


  • Chabahar port rail project: Iran drops India after inking $400 billion China deal.. That China pulled the strings behind the scene cannot be doubted... The possibility of Iran leasing out the Chabahar port to China at a later date cannot be ruled out. If that happens, China would have extended its strategic reach to the Pakistan-Iran coast.

    Act quickly: India dragged its feet on building the rail link from Chabahar to Zahedan. First, the delays were over contract disagreements, then the fear of US sanctions, and later, after the US provided a “carve-out” to India on the port and the rail link, the difficulty under the sanctions regime in finding international suppliers for material... From Nepal to Myanmar, Sri Lanka and Iran, Delhi has made commitments on building power projects, highways, railways, and other infrastructure. Each proceeds slowly or not at all. The Pancheshwar Dam project in Nepal, for instance, has been hanging fire since 1991.


  • Dr Bharat Karnad on India's inaction:

    Commercial satellite imagery reportedly shows the LAC has shifted 12 to 15 kms in Depsang, 1 km in Galwan, 2 to 4 kms in Gogra and 8 kms in Pangong Lake. This would be by far the largest loss of territory to China since the 1962 war. Is this observation correct?
    I have been warning since the beginning about the quite considerable loss of territory. I estimate that China's policy of what I have called incremental annexation has resulted in the loss of some 1,300 sq kms of Indian territory in the new millennium.

    Should the buck not stop with NSA Ajit Doval?
    Well, yes, because he is supposed to ingest all intel, field reports, military briefings, analyses and recommendations from the China Study Group, et al, and alight on policy options for the PM.

    You have said repeatedly that Indian intelligence knew about the Chinese build up for the last one year. More specifically, intelligence had told the army about Chinese movements in the LAC area, but the army took this to be normal spring time activity. Would you say this has been an operational lapse by the army?
    As I have already said, there's no excuse for XIV Corps Headquarters in Leh or army headquarters in Delhi and for the army misreading imagery intelligence transmitted to the Defence Intelligence Agency by DIPAC.


  • “You must make Tibet a core issue”: By referring it as the India China border, India had ceded 2.5 million square kilometres and legitimized Chinese claim, he stressed. “Now in Doklam and Galwan Valley, what are you arguing about..one kilometre here, or two-kilometre…you have already conceded 2. 5 million square kilometres of land. You must take it back; say it is the Indo-Tibet border and it is disputed…You must make Tibet a core issue”.


Wednesday, July 15, 2020

Quick notes: Three Gorges dam | Tech innovation...

  • China's Sorrow: Record floods raise questions about China's Three Gorges Dam.. “One of the major justifications for the Three Gorges Dam was flood control, but less than 20 years after its completion we have the highest floodwater in recorded history”. . . . . Dikes collapse



  • Rajeev on Chinese overreach: 'If the economy begins to flounder, the empire may fall apart sooner than we think... The fatal mistake for the USSR was the invasion of Afghanistan. Quite possibly the fatal mistake for the Chinese empire is the assault on Ladakh'.


  • Tibetan Government-in-Exile: The US has for the first time directly provided funds to the Tibetan Government-in-Exile based in India, a move likely to rile up China.


  • The big secret of tech innovation: Although this may sound strange, copying is good for innovation. This is how Chinese technology companies got started — by adapting Silicon Valley’s technologies for Chinese use and improving on them. The Chinese routinely monitor what app is achieving success elsewhere, and duplicate it before they start adding features and innovating; they learn from the best and improve.

    Steve Jobs built the Macintosh by copying the windowing interface from the Palo Alto Research Center. As he admitted in 1994, “Picasso had a saying, ‘Good artists copy, great artists steal’; and we have always been shameless about stealing great ideas.” Almost every Apple product has features that were first developed by others.. Mark Zuckerberg also built Facebook by copying from MySpace and Friendster, and he continues to copy products.


  • Chinese firm among bidders for Vande Bharat trains: The emergence of a Chinese company for these train sets being promoted as indigenous products comes after a violent face-off between India and China


  • Fail: India’s top exports to China remain in the raw materials category. “China has been very effectively using non-tariff barriers to curb imports that it wants to avoid. On the other hand, it also uses these restrictions as a political tool to control bilateral relations”. A contingency plan, prepared by the govt bats for increasing duties on the top 100 imports from China.


  • Delete Facebook: Delete FB account or quit army: Delhi HC to officer


  • Cycling could become the new normal: "Cycling for short distances can result in an annual benefit of Rs 1.8 trillion to the Indian economy and it also has the potential of increasing personal fuel savings by over Rs 27 billion. Investment in cycling infrastructure has economic benefits up to 5.5 times the initial amount pumped in," says a communique from the Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs.


  • Superstrata's carbon fiber e-bike: True unibody construction with no seams or welding. “This piece comes out as a single piece from our machines”.
  • https://www.engadget.com/superstrata-ion-terra-3d-printed-carbon-fiber-electric-bike-140050711.html


Thursday, July 09, 2020

Quick notes: Tibet card | Brigadier Dalvi...

  • Play the Tibet card with China: The logical step is to challenge the very legitimacy of Chinese claim over Tibet.. China abrogates treaties at will.


  • Brig John Parashram Dalvi: The man who told India about Nehru's Himalayan blunder.. "And let the guilty, and their political successors contemplate, the great crime of sending brave men to do battle against AK47's with WW I obsolete.303 Lee Enfield bolt action rifles".


  • Rethink of India's China policy: “We need to join forces with the US, Japan, Australia, South Korea, Indonesia and western Europe to take on China economically''... “Will Mr Modi pitch national interests over economic ones is a political question”.


  • Biden victory is CCP victory: HK businessman says it like it is.


  • The Guru is a principle, not a person:


  • The art of not doing anything while appearing to be doing a lot:


Friday, July 03, 2020

Quick notes: Ignored inputs | India's options...

  • Flagging Chinese incursions for long, say Ladakhis: “Not just for the past couple of months, I have been raising these concerns since 2015”.. The Facebook posts by Chodon, a BJP leader from a nomadic family, date back to May 2019. She also shared her earlier post in which she had written that Chinese PLA soldiers had entered 6 km into Indian territory at Dhola village in Nyoma Block, unfurled their national flag and stopped locals from hoisting the Indian, Tibetan, and Buddhist flags.



  • Naiveté is in our DNA: "With China, we have very good mechanisms in place to maintain peace and tranquility" - Gen Bipin Rawat.


  • PLA using Tibetans against India: The CCP has obviously decided to integrate more Tibetans into its defence forces; to start with, in the paramilitary forces, giving them good salaries and buying their fidelity. The Tibet Military District has many senior Tibetan officers of the rank of colonels, senior colonels and major generals (never higher, as CCP does not trust the Tibetans that much); but this gives a clear indication that the Tibetans will participate in future conflicts with India (in all probability, some were already present in Galwan). It does not augur well for the relations between India and Tibet.


  • India’s options against China: "The PLA lost the advantage of surprise, preemption and the window that was available upto end June while the Indian Army reserves were being mobilised, acclimatised and deployed. The likely plans of the PLA have been war-gamed for years by the Indian Army, and I have no doubts that the PLA will come to grief". - Lt Gen (retd) HS Panag


  • China Killed Canada’s Greatest Tech Company: China not only bankrupted Canada's most successful company, they hired those Engineers later and milked even more... "Much of the intellectual property that underlies Huawei’s current 5G offering came along with the top Nortel scientists in Ottawa."


  • Cyber defense: All major non-western societies have a "firewall"


  • CCP's hunger: China's super trawlers are stealing fish stocks in North West Pacific, South America and Western Africa.


  • Israel shuts evangelical TV channel: Israel's regulator has ordered an evangelical Christian broadcaster's new channel off the air, saying it applied to serve a Christian audience but instead has sought to persuade Jews with the gospel of Jesus.


  • The year of the electric bike.: Pedal-assisted models can reach speeds of about 30 miles per hour, helping people get to work without having to rely on public transportation while also offering a chance to exercise.


  • Robot uses UVC light to disinfect warehouses : The system can neutralize about 90% of coronavirus particles on surfaces.



Tuesday, June 30, 2020

Quick notes: Fighter drones | Securing the heights...

  • Fighter Drones are the future: US Air Force to test fighter drone against human pilot 


  • Barely-literate Raksha Mantri: The Indian army is finally paying attention and doing the elementary thing of securing the heights on the Galwan to prevent the PLA from dominating the Depsang-DBO-Karakorum Pass Highway. The failure to take so basic a precaution of controlling the heights to protect this highway — a national strategic asset, suggests a lapse in professionalism and a laid back attitude of the army and the govt that the country can ill-afford. It permitted the PLA to get not just a toehold but a foothold.
  • Imagine if A K Anthony did this!


  • Semiconductors, which is a critical component of phones besides ICs, diodes and transistors, is something that China holds an edge over India. . . . . . . Does anyone in Modi sarkar understand what this means?

    Can Indian smartphones make a comeback? Due to immense competition from Chinese smartphone makers, companies like Micromax, Lava and Karbonn which were immensely popular a few years ago, are virtually non-existent now. . . . . . . Maybe, Indians should buy HTC?


  • Tibet's independence key to our national security: India’s support to Tibet can be more viable only when India can muster enough international support to stifle China, socially and more important, economically.

    The Speech that got Richard Gere banned from the Oscars:



  • Fungi, the next frontier of biodiversity science: A teaspoon of soil from the Amazon contains as many as 1,800 microscopic life forms, of which 400 are fungi.


  • RadWagon 4 250W: Electric Cargo Bike



  • Hypocrisy framed:
  • Image



Thursday, June 25, 2020

Quick notes: Tibetan cause | Online hatred...

  • The cause Hollywood forgot: “Any Hollywood blockbuster that wants to really bring in the money will need to appear in China. That requires compromises in the films but also careful consideration by the actors – do they really want to put their career at risk by talking about Tibet and China? Richard Gere continues to be a high-profile supporter of Tibet, but he has stated that his stance on Tibet has cost him work.

    “China has closed it off from the world, making it impossible to visit without a guide, and closely monitors Tibetans’s phone and internet activity so that as little information as possible gets out. Getting information out of Tibet is as tough as getting information out of North Korea these days, and if people don’t hear the stories, they won’t be engaged or keen to help.”



  • Ratan Tata: Stop online hatred, support each other in 'year of challenges'. "I believe this year specially calls for all of us to be unified and helpful and is not the time to pull each other down".


  • Buying The Wrong Warplanes: The Mirage 2000 has been a more effective fighter in Indian service than the Su-30 has been. The Su-30 not only lacks the latest precision air-to-ground ordnance, it doesn’t perform well from the high-altitude air bases that support Indian operations along the LAC. The Rafale, the French-made successor to the Mirage, likewise is among India’s better fighters. But the country has ordered just 36 Rafales.


  • No change in ground positions: China continues military build-up along LAC in eastern Ladakh amid talks.

    President of Tibetan govt in exile: After occupying Tibet, Chinese leaders said they'll go for Nepal, Ladakh, Bhutan


  • What happened in 1962 in Galwan? By nightfall of July 10, more than 300 Chinese soldiers encircled the Gorkhas who held their ground under Naik Subedar Jung Bahadur Gurung. On July 13, orders were issued to the Gorkha regiment to fire if the Chinese crept ahead. Starting October 4, “The Gorkhas, having lived cheek by jowl with the Chinese for more than two months, were ferried out by returning Mi-4 helicopters over the next few days.”


  • Superblocks: How Barcelona is taking city streets back from cars. . . . . . . Why Car-Free Streets may be here to stay


  • :

Sunday, June 21, 2020

Quick notes: Tibet question | Mountain combat...

**Reposting an older post.. may appear with a new date due to my bungle.. **

  • Tibet the solution for India’s border strategy: Under Nehru, India became the first country in the world to recognize China’s sovereignty over Tibet. Now it is time for India to revise its Himalayan border strategy to keep a firm position on its territory. To that end, India should revise its outdated policy on Tibet’s status and officially declare Tibet to be an occupied country.

    This significant revision of the “Tibet question” would serve two interests. First, such a declaration would automatically refute Beijing’s claim over the Himalayan borders and make China’s control over the Himalayan region illegal. Second, this political revision would re-validate the McMahon Line and Tibet-Ladakh border treaty, making India’s claim over the Himalayan border internationally valid and legal.


  • India maintains an edge over China: Recent studies from the Belfer Center at the Harvard Kennedy School of Government in Boston and the Center for a New American Security in Washington suggest India maintains an edge in high-altitude mountainous environments.


  • Startling Bravery: Indian soldiers fought valiantly and with tremendous grit "till the last", even to the extent that half of them died in battle. The immediate bravery of those Bihar Regiment soldiers must be saluted and memorialised.


  • Chinese Economic Takeover: “At India’s biggest wholesale market in Delhi’s Sadar Bazaar, almost everything on the shelves — toys, electronics, watches, home appliances – is made in China.. Almost 70% of electrical items come from China. Even the components of several Indian made items such as pumps to electronic toys come from China”.

    - Chinese have invested in the following Indian sectors:-
      1. Automobile Industry (40%)
      2. Metallurgical Industry (17%)
      3. Power (7%)
      4. Construction (5%)
      5. Services (4%).


  • Stop endorsing Chinese brands: Traders appeal to Aamir Khan, Deepika Padukone, Katrina Kaif, Virat Kohli and others to stop endorsing Chinese products.

    - Chinese smartphones are now 'Indian brands'! To escape backlash Chinese handset makers with own manufacturing lines in India have decided to highlight Made-in-India in their packaging more prominently from now.

    - Campaign to boycott China-linked apps picks up speed.
    https://www.rediff.com/business/report/traders-tell-celebs-to-stop-endorsing-chinese-brands/20200618.htm


  • Hostile Nepal: Nepal stations bombard Uttarakhand villages with anti-India songs and news.


  • India should do this too: Australia's university fee changes mean humanities students will pay the entire cost of their degrees. . . . . .
    Huge cuts to Humanities and Social Sciences at Japanese Universities.



Monday, June 15, 2020

Quick notes: CCP propaganda | Temple bell...

  • China peddling disinformation on Twitter: "While China won't allow its people to use Twitter, it is happy to use it to sow propaganda and disinformation internationally".


  • Muslim man develops contactless bell for temple: “It is a contact-less bell. It rings just when any devotee or priest gesticulates at ringing the bell from a distance of feet and half. This is an ultimate gift to our temple from Nahru Khan”, said Kailash Pandit, the prime priest of the Pashupatinath temple in Mandsaur


  • Chennai set to become drone manufacturing hub:  Once drones are manufactured at a large scale at an affordable cost, the system could be used in traffic management, forestry, agriculture and disaster response, and during the pandemic.


  • Alternative therapy: 30 COVID-19 patients discharged after Siddha treatment in Chennai. Patients are taught yoga and pranayama and are made to do salt water gargling and steam inhalation.


  • Free Tibet: Astrologer predicts Soviet Union-style implosion of China



  • Land grab: Changes to Karnataka Land Reforms Act to allow non-agriculturists to buy farmland 


  • Tamil Nadu bans plastic packaging of goods: This means even items like biscuits and chips can no longer be packed in plastic covers.


  • Perpetually delayed: Indian power producers seek more time to cap emissions. . . . . . Britain goes coal free as renewables edge out fossil fuels.


  • Creating walkable & bikeable cities: The issue with walkability in the Indian context is that in most cities, pavements are either non-existent or are dirty, broken and encroached upon. Pavements are routinely dug up for laying of pipes and cables. Pedestrian traffic signals are mostly non-existent or often non-functional.


Monday, May 06, 2013

GOI Dhimmis order Indian troops to withdraw from Indian territory!

Absurd outcome of the Chinese aggression into Ladakh: Indian troops withdraw from Indian territory encroached upon by Chinese 19 kms inside the LAC!
No clarity on Chinese withdrawal to their side of China occupied Kashmir (Aksai Chin).

Apparently, Salman Khurshid's
"acne cream" will leave behind a
strategically located permanent scar in close proximity to the Siachen glacier. The Dhimmis in the GOI owe an explanation to the country on their latest exhibition of docility at the border.

http://m.rediff.com/news/report/india-china-end-stand-off-armies-withdraw-from-ladakh/20130505.htm#


A battalion of Chinese troops estimated at about 50 and accompanied by vehicles and dogs had intruded 19 km inside the Indian territory across the Line of Actual Control in the Daulat Beg Oldi sector on April 15 and set up five tents.

The Indian troops had also established tented posts facing the Chinese forces at a distance of 300 metres.

The troops of the two sides held four flag meetings, the last one being yesterday. However, there was no positive outcome from these meetings, which went hand-in-hand with high-level diplomatic efforts to break the impasse.

An agreement was reached late on Sunday for both sides to pull back their troops simultaneously from the face off point, which was completed at 1930 hours, the sources said.

Indian and Chinese commanders at the local level shook hands before withdrawing, the sources said. However, it was not clear whether the Chinese would withdraw all the way back across the LAC to the position that obtained on April 15 as was demanded by India which pressed for restoration of status quo ante.




Sunday, April 24, 2011

Friday, March 11, 2011

Dalai Steps Down

The Dalai Lama has relenquished political authority over the Tibetan people, and now remains as only their spiritual leader. This move by him will help to neutralize China's attempts to assert control over Tibetans by holding his successor as their puppet.

It's now a question of how Tibetans can organize themselves politically, to select a new political authority to speak for their political aspirations.

Wednesday, February 16, 2011